Showing posts with label journalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label journalism. Show all posts

Monday, May 12, 2008

Thoughts on Fish At Bay interactive storytelling class project and convergence

After a semester of work, my interactive storytelling class launched its site about fish in Biscayne Bay launched last Wednesday: Fish At Bay.

Hats off to our converged class of "print" and visual journalism students: Walyce Almeida, Maria Arroyave, Erica Landau, Brian Schlansky, Jen Shook, Jamie Straz, Alex Thacker and Jason Walker.

Our professors, Kim Grinfeder (visual journalism) and Sam Terilli (print journalism), did a great job overseeing the project -- and recruiting everyone. Also, thanks to our TA, Zeven Rodriguez.

To provide some background, Grinfeder and Terilli have collaborated the past two fall semesters with their Web production and in-depth storytelling classes, respectively. I was in the fall 2008 in-depth class.

With this spring's (experimental) interactive storytelling class, they took it to the next level of convergence. As far as I know, this was the first class at the University of Miami School of Communication to combine the talents of print and visual journalism students in one class.

I took advantage of the opportunity to get more experience shooting and editing video, as well as to become proficient with Final Cut Pro. I particularly enjoyed being able to work in so may areas:

  • Write history story
  • Shoot b-roll and take photos for history video
  • Edit history video
  • Edit and write cutlines for history photos
  • Edit Delicate Balance video
  • Shoot an interview for the Building on the Bay video
  • Copy edit all stories
  • Write about page
  • Add p tags and hyperlinks (plus find links for) all stories
I'm usually critical of the lack of collaboration between the print and visual programs, but I've seen some very encouraging strides this semester.

Grinfeder and Terilli get it. Chris Delboni, my online journalism professor, and Michelle Seelig, the spring Web production professor, get it. (More thoughts on the online journalism class and our collaboration with the Web production class to follow).

So, what now?

Without a question, the interactive storytelling class should be a standard course, and it should be required for all journalism students at UM. Yes, that means bringing in broadcast as well. And there needs to be more converged classes, like an introductory storytelling class (more on this to come as well).

Resistance is futile. You must adapt.

Weigh in: What do you think of the Fish At Bay site?

Monday, April 28, 2008

Editor term comes to an end

It's over. One year. Fifty issues. Many, many great memories.

Monday's issue was my last as editor in chief of The Miami Hurricane. We made great strides forward this year in print and online, and I can't wait until our new Web site debuts in August (yes, I still need to do an update post on this).

I'd like to thank all of this year's editors for their hard work and wish those who are graduating the best of luck.

For the continuing and new editors, keep on rockin' the news -- you guys are going to do great things. Here's the new staff list:

Editor in Chief
Matthew Bunch (moving up from sports editor and blogmaster)

Visuals Editor
Shayna Blumenthal

News Editor
Chelsea Kate Isaacs (promoted from assistant news)

Assistant News Editors
Erika Capek (promoted from staff news writer)
Edward Fishman (promoted from contributing news writer)

Opinion Editor
Joshua Newman (new)

EDGE Editor
Dan Buyanovsky (continuing in position)

Sports Editor
Pravin Patel (promoted from assistant sports editor)

Assistant Sports Editor
Christina Di Nicola (promoted from senior sports writer)

Photography Editor
Chelsea Matiash (promoted from assistant photo editor)

Assistant Photo Editor
Steve Root (promoted from staff photographer)

Webmaster
Brian Schlansky (continuing)

Multimedia Editor
Ryan Ondriezek (continuing)

Assistant Multimedia Editor
TBD

Copy Desk Chief
Nate Harris (promoted from copy editor)

I'm still undecided on what my role with the paper will be next year, but I plan to do something with online and multimedia. For one, Brian Schlansky and I will be working on the new site during the summer and beyond.

Now, back to working on a final project and (trying) to study for my two finals.

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

"The Paper" used to be my paper

I learned last school year that MTV would be doing a multi-part "documentary" about my high school newspaper, The Circuit. I was skeptical of how the network that brought you "My Super Sweet 16" would cover a journalism class/newspaper and I'll let you be the judge of that.

Here is the trailer for "The Paper"



The show premiered Monday night after being released Thursday for free on iTunes.

I've met most of the kids featured and I didn't notice any such rancor when I visited, but obviously there's a wee bit of tension -- or more than a wee bit. Nevertheless, they've put out some great issues this year, so I can report [spoiler warning?] that the newsroom does not burn down.

As a "reality show," it is of course not actual reality because people are always going to play to the camera, particularly when two of the featured staffers have been in drama club. Try to guess which ones by commenting below.

I'll be visiting again sometime during the week of April 28 and perhaps I will do an interview with the featured players and Mrs. Weiss, the most awesome high school newspaper adviser ever.

Stay tuned for that, and the rest of the series -- Mondays at 10:30 p.m. on MTV.

Side note: The Miami Hurricane was approached last year by a group that wanted to a reality show about us called "The Chronicles." We got a good laugh from the mock-up flyer/poster, which hangs in my office, because of how hyped the concept was.

We thought it would be a pretty boring show since there was no office drama and declined.

Weigh in: Did you watch "The Paper?" What did you think?

Related links

MTV’s ‘The Paper’: Where Teens, Journalism and Coolness Meet - Mallary Tenore

Meet some teenagers who are passionate about journalism - Romanesko

MTV's New Show Called "The Paper" - premieres on April 14 - Wired Journalists

MTV to air series on high school newspaper - Student Newspaper Survival Blog

MTV on High School 'Paper' Trail - Editor & Publisher

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Mad Journalism

We had an assignment a few weeks ago in my online journalism class to do a "video bio." After two tries that involved yawn videos, I decided to try something completely different.

Sports Editor Matt Bunch joined me on April 7 to help shoot the third version. We put our heads together to get what you see in this final video. Enjoy!



Nevada Sagebrush uses Twitter to liveblog editor selection meeting

The Nevada Sagebrush (University of Nevada Reno) liveblogged its editor selection meeting Saturday afternoon using Twitter.

The tweets were very comprehensive and, needless to say, flooded my Twhirl window for the duration of the meeting, but it was all good fun.

Thanks to Chelsea Otakan for directing followers of her Twitter account to the Sagebrush's.

In an interesting twist, I recognized in an early tweet that one my fellow Miami Herald summer 2008 interns is on staff at the Sagebrush. It's a small world after all.

Weigh in: Does your news organization use Twitter?

Shameless plug: The Miami Hurricane's page.

(Since you're in the neighborhood, check out mine too.)

Saturday, April 12, 2008

CommTogether right now, over...journalism

I'm a student in the School of Communication at the University of Miami, but you would think that the various journalism programs (print, broadcast and visual) speak different languages sometimes from the lack of collaboration that is present.

Yes, there have been several notable successes -- and I've been lucky to be in three classes this year that focus on convergence (In-depth reporting for convergent media, online journalism and interactive storytelling) -- but the level of cooperation is still not where it should be.

I kept all this is mind while devising a new final project for my CNJ 442 online journalism class, after the first plan regarding the new TheMiamiHurricane.com didn't work out a planned.

The result is a social networking site the class is developing using Ning:

CommTogether

The general idea came to me one night as I was chatting online with Hurricane Visuals Editor Will Wooten (check out his recent site redesign). Regarding the group name, which I love, credit goes to Kiersten Schmidt.

Here are details from the CNJ 442 proposal that I drafted and the class helped refine:

Goals

  • Bring together in one forum the three journalism programs at the University of Miami School of Communication: print, broadcast and visual
  • Recruit students, faculty, staff, alumni and prospective students
  • Begin a conversation about the future of school’s journalism programs
  • Conceptualize collaborative projects for classes, students, media outlets, etc.
  • Take ideas and turn them into reality

Elements

  • Profile pages: students, faculty, administrators
  • Groups: programs, classes, projects, media
  • Feeds: blogs, news, etc.
  • Photos and videos
  • Blogs: internal
  • Comments

Action plan

  • Discuss and decide on name for group (complete)
  • Create network (complete)
  • Create profile pages (complete)
  • Create groups within network: programs, classes, media, organizations, etc.
  • Invite/recruit students, professors, administrators, staff, alumni and prospective students (in progress)
  • Table in the SoC courtyard
  • Solicit ideas from everyone regarding the future of curriculum, organizations
  • Conceptualize possible collaboration projects, way to converge
  • Maintain the discussion
  • Continue to recruit new group members
UPDATE: I forgot one very important reason for this site:

Students should have a voice in the development of curriculum.

Weigh in:
Any suggestions/ideas for this site?

Thursday, April 10, 2008

College Content Management social network

Last Saturday night I created a social networking site using Ning called College Content Management.

I've seen the power of Wired Journalists and NextNewsroom during the past few months and those served as my inspiration.

The idea floated around my head for a few weeks, but it was not realized until after I talked with Megan Taylor, online managing editor at The Alligator and Kevin Koehler, contributing editor (basically the online editor) at the Old Gold & Black at the NextNewsroom conference last week.

We talked extensively about each of our content management systems:
It became clear to me that there's a desire among Web editors to share ideas, and gripe about their CMSes and, the day before I flew back home, the group was born.

The slogan: Because we all have to deal with a CMS.

The description: Do you have a Web site for your student media organization? "Yes." Mine does too. We should work together.

So, come one, come all student journalists, editors, advisers and anyone else who uses or manages a university/college news site.

And be sure to spread the word. I plan to start searching the Web for online editors' e-mail addresses to invite them, but any help would be much appreciated.

Sunday, April 6, 2008

NextNewsroom conference recap

Megan Taylor, managing editor for online/new media at The Independent Florida Alligator, and I had the same idea to recap the NextNewsroom conference, but she beat me to it:

NextNewsroom: Wrap-up

Megan summarized it all very well, so I won't repeat what's already been said except to thank Chris O'Brien for organizing what was hands-down one of the best journalism conferences I've attended -- and I've been to quite a few, thanks to The Miami Hurricane and UM's SPJ chapter.

I'd also like to thank Megan for providing the proper computer to stream video live using ustream.tv and later Yahoo!Live with my Canon HV20, which would have been impossible because I don't have a computer with a six-pin FireWire port. Her hand mic was another asset, helping us get pretty decent sound, and she played videographer for the first livestreamed session before I -- sadly -- gave back her MacBook Pro.

I couldn't have done it without her. And besides the awesomeness that is livestreaming video, this is a great testament to the importance of working as a team. I've done mojo/backpack journalist/one-man-band coverage of events before, but backpack journalist-squared is hands down the better way to go.

For more great coverage of the conference, as Megan also cites, check out Bryan Murley's CoverItLive blogs: day 1 and day 2.

Weigh in: What did you think of all the coverage?

Friday, April 4, 2008

NextNewsroom - How to change from the old to the new

Facilitated by John North, Knoxville News Sentinel

What is the new world?
"It's publishing now, we don't wait."

On the board

Old World:

  • Print tomorrow or
  • Print whenever
New World: Web, e-mail, text
  • Publish now
  • Publish now
  • Publish now
  • Publish now
  • Print tomorrow
You [should] begin to work a story throughout the day. Start with a a few graphs early on and evolve the story slowly -- not a 15- to 20-inch update each time.

"We're talking about quick hits and things you can get up quickly."

Then, you can reach into that system and put it into the newspaper.

"For us, it's really been, 'Wow, you can do this?' "

Shannon Morgan, editor in chief, The Arbiter, Boise State
  • "My focus to tell the stories in as many dimensions as we can."
  • You also have to make sure the various elements are different.
  • People thought, "Oh, she's just that multimedia girl -- she doesn't know journalism."
Megan Taylor, managing editor for online, The Independent Florida Alligator
  • She recently wrote a story for the front page and people were surprised she could write.
  • Regarding having staff do new media: "You can't just tell them what they have to do, you just have to do it."
North

"Universities are on the radar nationwide now. You guys can do amazing things. If you guys feel limited, you're not; there are no barriers." Wait until you get to the paid world to see limits.

For new media: "If you set that expectation, you will get the result you want. ... Once you start that little bit of synergy, it tends to begin to grow itself." It's not so difficult to push through that wall to find success.

Promotion/marketing:
Examples include promos, Web refers, etc.

"Sometimes you just have to be creative and think outside of the box."

LIVESTREAM: NextNewsroom conference - Restructuring newsroom management

Facilitated by Bryan Murley of CICM.



Chris Carroll, student communications, Vanderbilt University

Discussing Inside Vandy

  • They don't have a journalism program, so they didn't have to deal with traditional structures.
  • "There is no Web editor. It's everyone's responsibility to produce for the Web."
  • "We sort of dismantled some of that traditional structure."
Murley, CICM
  • Reverse publication - post story online first
  • "It seems antiquated" to break something in print
  • There are very few Web editors who become editor in chief, and that should change
Brad Arendt, general manager, The Arbiter, Boise State
  • Their six-step process: Story, path, deadline, communicate, edit, execute
  • Try to have a collaborative thought process in management
  • "The story is the key"
Dan Morris, adviser, The Arbiter, Boise State
  • They have had editors in chief who have been the photo editor, assistant opinion editor, opinion writer who worked on local TV station, etc. That's made changing structure a little bit easier.
Greg Linch, editor in chief, The Miami Hurricane
  • I was just yapping about what we do. Blah, blah, blah...
Megan Taylor, managing editor for online, The Independent Florida Alligator
  • They instated a requirement for staffers to produce multimedia
  • Because they are independent, their funds are limited and that's why her staff is two people
  • Everyone is still print biased
John North, The Knoxville News Sentinel
  • We crow when we can beat TV with posting online
Shannon Morgan, editor in chief, The Arbiter, Boise State
  • We're trying to get people to tell stories in more than on way
  • 80-100 people
  • My problem now is trying to figure out how to restructure the staff
Kevin Koehler, contributing editor (online editor), Old Gold and Black, Wake Forest
  • Making the transition to Web, it's hard to get people think of doing things and doing them well
  • People want to do it, there's interest and people are excited, but they have to learn how it's done
  • They don't have a journalism major or any new media courses
  • "It's too big of a hump on their on a pressing deadline"
Arendt, The Arbiter
  • We tried embedding a multimedia person in the section, but it failed because they were left out or ignored
  • It's important to look at your deadlines for your output
  • They expect 2-3 paragraph piece recapping a game after it ends, then they follow up
  • If you run efficiently, I think students
  • But the kicker is, "How do you do it?"

Thursday, April 3, 2008

NextNewsroom blog - Newsroom of the future panel

From NextNewsroom



Panelists (L-R):


Rusty Coats, director, Strategic Initiatives, Interactive Media for Media General, Inc.

Sharon Behl Brooks, Associate Professor of Communication Arts and English at Hastings College

Christian Oliver, INNOVATION Media Consulting Group

Robertson Barrett, Senior Vice President, Interactive and General Manager of latimes.com

Moderator: Keith Hanadel, broadcast design director at HLW, a New York-based architecture and design firm

PANEL

Hanadel: They've been trying to merge print and online for a long time, but now they're "starting in earnest to merge the staffs."

Oliver: There's going to be more fragmentation and news staffs will have a diverse backgrounds like the panel.

Brooks: They've brought all their student media together, including the yearbook.

Coats: In the early days of convergence, all the talk was about print and broadcast working together. Since then, they've seen online become more important than both.

Fielded data is now huge and they're realigning journalists around that. He cited Indystar.com when you search "911."

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

NextNewsroom conference

Two journalism conferences in two weeks, how much better can life get? (Especially because I'm getting reimbursed).

The NextNewsroom conferenceat Duke University looks to be one of most interesting journalism gathering I've been attended.

Don't get me wrong, last week's SPJ region 3 conference was great, and so were the past two and all other conventions I've been to, but none have been as focused as this:

"If you could build the ideal newsroom from scratch, what would it look like? We're trying to help The Chronicle, the Duke University student newspaper, find an answer. Join our conversation."
The event's chief organizer, Chris O'Brien of the San Jose Mercury News, is bringing together professionals, professors, students and others to discuss all this.

I have all my usual gear, so look out for liveblogs, tweets and live video feeds (if I can borrow someone's Mac and there's an Internet connection).

Find out more about the project:
Weigh in: Describe your ideal "NextNewsroom" (answers may be posted to the Ning group).

Saturday, March 29, 2008

SPJ region 3 conference update

COLUMBIA, S.C. -- It's day two here at the SPJ region 3 convention at the University of South Carolina.

Yesterday was great. New people, new ideas. I attended the following sessions:

  • New Media Challenges: I learned a lot more about managing online communities.
  • Preparing for Tomorrow's Newsroom: A very original and insightful presentation by Joe Grimm.
  • Freelancing for the New Media Age: There was basically no mention of new media, but the freelancing tips were good.
  • Reception: Chatted with students and others while eating chicken and brownie and sipping sweet, sweet iced tea.
I was unable to liveblog the events yesterday afternoon because there is no guest access to USC's wireless network. I took notes and post summaries of the events when time allows.

What's on deck today:
  • One-man Banding
  • Mark of Excellence luncheon
  • Reporting by the Numbers
  • The Changing Political Landscape
Then we fly back to Miami tonight and it's deadline tomorrow!

Friday, March 28, 2008

In my mind I'm going to Carolina

And so the music-themed posts continue tonight...

I'll be traveling to Columbia, S.C. for the SPJ region three conference in a few hours. This will be my third regional conference in as many years, at which I represent the University of Miami campus chapter and The Miami Hurricane.

Region three includes Alabama, Florida, Georgia and South Carolina.

Are you going? Let me know in a comment or via e-mail, greglinch[at]gmail.com.

Also, I'll be at Duke next week for the Next Newsroom conference. Drop me a line if you'll be there.

I love being a student and being able to travel to these conferences for free!

Stay tuned: I'll have my laptop there to liveblog and post general thoughts during both conferences. I will also have my video and still cameras.

Also, be sure to look for my Twitter updates during the conference -- and in general.

Weigh in: Would a tripod count against me as one of my two carry-on items? D'oh!

Thursday, March 27, 2008

The CMSes they are a-changin'

Using a blogging platform for a Web site?

Yes.

After first planning to use Drupal, we've decided that it is no longer the best option for TheMiamiHurricane.com's new content management system.

So, (drumroll), we've decided to go with WordPress.

Why? In short, it is the better overall, long-term option. More reasons/details to come in a future post.

I'd like to thank Sean Blanda from Temple University. Sean's insights and advice -- via his blog, a session at the CMA conference in NYC that our news editor and adviser attended and an e-mail response to visuals editor Will Wooten -- helped us feel more confident in our final decision.

Some background: I started reading Sean's blog during spring break, particularly intrigued with the posts about the Temple News' experience with WordPress. Ironically, a day or two after reading some old posts, Will e-mailed me and brought up the idea of using WP after doing his own separate research.

Besides Temple, the Sagebrush at University of Nevada Reno also uses WordPress.

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Journalism prof, former Herald counsel's advice for new (or any) bloggers

Sam Terilli, a University of Miami journalism professor whose background is in law, spoke with my online journalism class Thursday about law and the Internet. He has practiced law for more than 24 years, including 12 as general counsel at The Miami Herald.

After his talk I asked him what advice he would give to a student wanting to start a blog. Check it out his answer, which is relevant to any blogger.

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Job/internship panel to be livestreamed today at 12:30 p.m.

I'll be moderating a panel today that will discuss what students need to know and do to prepare for journalism jobs and internships.

My money is on mindset and skillset, in addition to the fundamentals.

The event
will begin at 12: 30 p.m. in Studio A of the School of Communication and is hosted by the UM student chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists (and organized by me!).

The speakers are:

The first part of the event will be a Q & A session with the panelists, each of which does recruiting work for his/her respective organization. After that, they will meet individually with students to provide personalized feedback, critique resumes, etc.

Inspiration for the livecast medium
After watching the livecast of a video strategy session (The Northern Short Course in Photojournalism) on ustream.tv, which Howard Owens teased on his blog, I thought it would be good to do the same with our session using that service.

And yesterday I saw Kyle Hansen's post LIVE Video! announcing that The Spartan Daily at San Jose (Calif.) State would be using ustream as well to broadcast a session Monday with the university president: The live video worked!

I had originally thought to do our livestream through the School of Comm's Web channel, but they don't have a player that I could use to embed the video.

Background
You may recall that this event was originally scheduled to take place during this year's Communication Week on Feb. 19. Unfortunately, we had to cancel because Fidel Castro decided to announcement that he was stepping down as president of Cuba that day.

Ask a question: Feel free to comment on this post or use the video player's built-in chat feature to submit a question, which requires registering with ustream.

Full disclosure: I interned at the Sentinel last summer and will be at The Herald this summer.

Friday, March 14, 2008

The discussion gets more interesting: Blogging about blogging, part deux

No, this is not a repeat post; this is "The Empire Strikes Back" version (sort of) to my last post, Blogging about blogging.

In that previous entry I linked to a March 12 post -- and a great follow-up -- by Howard Owens of GateHouse Media. With the first post, Owens responded to Dallas Maverick's owner Mark Cuban's explanation (March 10) of why he banned bloggers in the Mavs locker room.

Here are some of Cuban's comments from a March 13 post that came a day after Owens' remarks, most likely aimed at the general response to his March 10 announcement:

  • "...newspapers having 'bloggers' is easily one of the many bad decisions that newspapers have made over the past 10 years."
  • "Never, ever, ever consider something that any literate human being with Internet access can create in under 5 minutes to be a product or service that can in any way differentiate your business." [My reaction: really?]
  • "A blog is a blog is a blog is a blog."
  • "if I were marketing for them [The New York Times], I would be doing everything I could to send the message that 'The NY Times does not have blogs, we have Real Time Reports from the most qualified reporters in the world.' "
I comprehend his point regarding the Real Time Reports title, but this idea still seems contradictory to his "a blog is a blog is a blog" statement.

The Times' Saul Hansell responded earlier this evening with What I’ve Learned as a Blogger for The New York Times. Here are some of his points:
  • "I’d say that blog is the name of a format for information and opinion that is roughly analogous to 'column' or 'newsletter.' The format itself doesn’t tell you whether the content is pedestrian or inflammatory, impressionistic or deeply researched."
  • "...blogs are part of a conversation"
  • "...blogs can be a great extension to articles reported initially for the newspaper"
  • "One of the traditions of this place is an aversion to euphemisms. So call it whatever you want, but if it links like a blog, and is open like a blog, and interacts like a blog, then it is a blog."
These are all right on the mark, as is one of Owens' concluding remarks, which came before Cuba's more recent post: "So Cuban sells bloggers short, sadly."

Weigh in: What do you think of all these opinions? With whom do you agree?

Saturday, March 8, 2008

Tips on doing Web video from Ricardo Lopez

Listen below to excerpts of advice Miami Herald visual journalist Ricardo Lopez (left) gave my online journalism class on Feb. 28.

I captured the audio with my Olympus DS-30 using a lav. The photo is from the new media panel during Comm Week. Will Payne, from Current TV, is on the right.

Monday, March 3, 2008

More good advice from Mindy McAdams

A great post from Mindy McAdams:

What every journalism student needs to know (now)

It's a good summary of the fundamentals and skills student journalists/journalism students should know. The most important thing, as Mindy notes, is storytelling -- something that my online journalism professor, Chris Delboni, also emphasizes.